Alfred P. Murrah Federal Building

OKLAHOMA CITY — The office clock displayed in the Oklahoma City National Memorial & Museum is frozen at 9:02 and 37 seconds. It marks a passage in history, the day Oklahoma City — and the whole country — changed forever. At that moment April 19, 1995, Americans realized that if Oklahoma City wasn't safe from a terrorist bomb blast, no place was. Then recently, Oklahoma was struck again, this time by nature in the form of a monster tornado. The museum-memorial complex was not damaged by the tornado that ravaged suburban Oklahoma City on May 20, though it may be a factor in recovery. The museum maintains programs that help young people cope with tragedy, and...

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OKLAHOMA CITY — The office clock displayed in the Oklahoma City National Memorial & Museum is frozen at 9:02 and 37 seconds.
It marks a passage in history, the day Oklahoma City — and the whole country — changed forever. At that moment April 19,...

When Robert Gallucci arrived in Chicago to take the reins at the MacArthur Foundation in mid-2009, he found himself besieged by new "friends." "They had great ideas on how the foundation could spend its money," he...